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Learn All About The Bitcoin Mining Block Reward! 4 года назад


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Learn All About The Bitcoin Mining Block Reward!

https://d-central.tech/what-is-the-bi... --- https://d-central.tech/ --- “Bitcoin” has likely become part of your normal vocabulary over the past several years. You read articles about individuals becoming wealthy overnight due to Bitcoin investments skyrocketing or see the symbol as accepted payment online or in a store. This conjures many questions about the system, including what is Bitcoin mining and what is a block reward? Think of Bitcoin mining as the labor that is being performed behind-the-scenes and the associated block reward as payment for the hard work. Simply put, the Bitcoin block reward is the newly-generated Bitcoins that are given to miners who successfully solve each block. Each new block is added to the blockchain, which is a ledger of all transactions that have occurred on the network. Once a block is written, it cannot be removed or altered. When the system was first launched, the Bitcoin mining block reward was 50 Bitcoins from block #1 to 210,000 blocks. At 210,001 blocks, the block reward halves to 25 Bitcoins. With blocks being mined every 10-minutes on average and 144 blocks mined per day, it takes approximately four years to halve. The total number of Bitcoins in circulation will be 21-million, distributed to Bitcoin miners when blocks are created. Once the 21-million Bitcoins are produced, no new Bitcoins will be created, thus meeting the required circulation. It is impossible to counterfeit or bring new coins into circulation from outside the network since each coin must match the ledger. The Bitcoin mining block reward incentivizes miners to add computing power to the network. The most popular mining option is ASIC which is expensive and carries a high electricity cost but is faster and yields higher rewards. This is because ASIC is specifically for Bitcoin mining and do not have any other purpose. The financial goal of a miner is to have hardware and electricity costs of mining a single Bitcoin be lower than the price of one Bitcoin. The greater the computational power a miner has, the higher probability of mining a block and gaining a block reward. Many miners work in pools since the collective power of many can yield greater rewards. As miners continuously add more power to the network, the security increases. When a transaction is sent across the network, Bitcoin users must pay a fee. Currently, there is not a staggering number of Bitcoin users but those fees will eventually become large to cover the cost of the decreasing reward. Nakamoto stated that in a few years when the reward becomes too small, the transaction fee will become the new compensation for the miners. Therefore, the prediction is that in 20-years, the system will experience large transaction volumes or no volume at all. The 21 million Bitcoin limit is a rule that was mathematically derived but is not a precise figure. With the last projected Bitcoin being mined on October 8th, 2140, the total supply of Bitcoins will be slightly lower than the limit rule. Bitcoins can be rendered un-spendable with the simplest way being that the private key is lost. Also, Bitcoins are destroyed when sending them to an invalid address. Also, in theory, there could be a soft or hard fork that changes some of the rules. This is important concerning the deflationary position of Bitcoin, which is maintained by halving every four years. Assuming the miners can trust Bitcoin to maintain deflationary economics, you must believe that the chain cannot be coerced, and the Bitcoin community will live by the technical principles of the system. Unfortunately, it is not possible to understand whether the reward halving impacts Bitcoin’s price. Like all commodities, Bitcoin follows the same economic rules: a decrease in supply with a stead demand equates to a higher price. The main difference compared to other currencies is the block reward halving schedule is public. That means miners and users know when the rewards will halve so the price may not be impacted during halving. However, halving day in 2016 significantly moved markets that shocked the world. While the 2012 halving day ascended the price from $11 to $1,000 a year later, the price crashed back to a few hundred dollars shortly after. Not long after the 2016 halving day, in 2017, Bitcoin hit an all-time high of $20,000 per coin which gained the attention of the entire world. Markets went crazy and the skeptics were more convinced. It was at this point that the term “Bitcoin” became a more household name. Logic dictates that there is a direct relationship between halving and the price but there is no actual proof.

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